- Default constructor
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In computer programming languages the term “default constructor” refers to a constructor that is automatically generated in the absence of explicit constructors (and perhaps under other circumstances); this automatically provided constructor is usually a nullary constructor. In specification or discussion of some languages, “default constructor” may additionally refer to any constructor that may be called without arguments, either because it is a nullary constructor or because all of its parameters have default values.
C++
In C++, the standard describes the default constructor for a class as a constructor that can be called with no arguments (this includes a constructor whose parameters all have default arguments).[1] For example:
class MyClass { int x; int y; public: MyClass(); // constructor declared }; MyClass :: MyClass() // constructor defined { x = 100; y = 200; } int main() { MyClass object_1; // object created }
In C++, default constructors are significant because they are automatically invoked in certain circumstances:
- When an object value is declared with no argument list, e.g.
MyClass x;
; or allocated dynamically with no argument list, e.g.new MyClass
; the default constructor is used to initialize the object - When an array of objects is declared, e.g.
MyClass x[10];
; or allocated dynamically, e.g.new MyClass [10]
; the default constructor is used to initialize all the elements - When a derived class constructor does not explicitly call the base class constructor in its initializer list, the default constructor for the base class is called
- When a class constructor does not explicitly call the constructor of one of its object-valued fields in its initializer list, the default constructor for the field's class is called
- In the standard library, certain containers "fill in" values using the default constructor when the value is not given explicitly, e.g.
vector<MyClass>(10);
initializes the vector with 10 elements, which are filled with the default-constructed value of our type.
In the above circumstances, it is an error if the class does not have a default constructor.
The compiler will implicitly define a default constructor if no constructors are explicitly defined for a class. This implicitly-declared default constructor is equivalent to a default constructor defined with a blank body. For example:
class MyClass { ..... // No Constructor }; int main() { MyClass object_1; // No errors .... }
If some constructors are defined, but they are all non-default, the compiler will not implicitly define a default constructor. Hence, a default constructor may not exist for a class.This is the reason for a typical error which can be demonstrated by the following example.
class MyClass { private: int x; public: MyClass(int y); // A Constructor }; MyClass :: MyClass(int y) { x = y; } int main() { MyClass object_1(100); // Constructor Called MyClass object_2; // Error: No default Constructor return 0; }
As a constructor of type other than default is defined the compiler does not define a default constructor and hence the creation of object_2 leads to an error.[3]
Java and C#
In both Java and C#, a "default constructor" refers to a nullary constructor that is automatically generated by the compiler if no constructors have been defined for the class.The default constructor is also empty, meaning that it does nothing. A user defined constructor that takes no parameters is called a default constructor too.[4][5]
References
- ^ C++ standard, ISO/IEC 14882:1998, 12.1.5
C++ standard, ISO/IEC 14882:2003, 12.1.5 - ^ Computer Science A Structured Approach Using C++ by Behrouz A. Forouzan and Richard F. Gilberg
- ^ Computer Science A Structured Approach Using C++ by Behrouz A. Forouzan and Richard F. Gilberg
- ^ Java Language Specification, 3rd edition, section 8.8.9, "Default Constructor".
- ^ Using Constructors (C# Programming Guide)
Categories: - When an object value is declared with no argument list, e.g.
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